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What was your favorite cereal as a kid? Bronny and LeBron. NFL Sunday Ticket jury decides.
For our first ever in-person podcast, this week Jonah and Vanessa are joined by a bonafide musical and pop-culture legend: "Weird Al" Yankovic! Vanessa runs her own song parodies from college by our guest today to get his feedback, we dig deep into the history of Weird Al's favorite cereal and present him with a very special gift. Along the way we also talk about his favorite cartoons from growing up, his tour rider snack situation and what goes through his mind when he's onstage singing his hit song parodies to audiences all over the world. Finally we play a game of YESTOLGIA OR NOSTALGIA where we get everyone's take on the return of mood rings, Pizza Hut's New Yorker pizza and Vienetta Ice Cream. You've heard plenty of interviews with Weird Al before but has anyone else asked him about Black Flag or Kudos bars? Terry Gross look out, we're coming from your job! See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
No Fan Left Behind! Back of the Cereal Box was podcast guests at ICCC in Nashville TN courtesy of the team at Ecpctv Studios! Johnny, Dee Bartee and Ivy Roamn discuss Quisp, Comic Book Trivia and Dad Jokes! Brought to you by Hitchhiker Toys - www.hitchhikertoys.com Can't Beat An Original performed by The Murdering Crows. Get their music everywhere music is sold! Love our content? Become a Cereal Boxer Superfan at www.buymeacoffee.com/cerealboxpod --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/cerealboxpodcast/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/cerealboxpodcast/support
Dee & Johnny are live onsite at Smokey's Collectibles in Fairveiw TN to talk Jem Cartoons, Quisp Cereal and show off a vintage Power Ranger Pink Ranger doll! Connect with us at backofthecerealbox.fun --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/cerealboxpodcast/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/cerealboxpodcast/support
What do one 72 two 75's two 76's and one 79 have in common? They are the release years of the six movies we are reviewing today. Starting off today professor McGonagall and Chappy from iron eagle star in (Travels with my Aunt 1972.) This is directed by the mighty George Cukor, and I don't really know what to say about this except that it belongs on any classic 70's movie shelf. Let's just say that a dull branch manager finds out that his Aunt is super rad, and that of course Maggie Smith rules. Next up Glenda Jackson and Susannah York role play as a defense mechanism to deal with their oppressive employer in (Maids 1975) Whoa Sussannah was the lead in Images 1972 with Odo from DS9, probably should of mentioned that in the pod, oh well, we try. Moving on we have (The naked civil servant.) Here we have the wand maker Ollivander playing rad writer Quentin quisp. Quisp was OUT in the extremely dark times, film is great, see it now, and see us if you can't get a copy. Also the guy who objects about the size of the exhaust port in Star Wars is in this as well as Gimli the Dwarf. Next is (The mighty Bluebird 1976.) Here we have Cukor directing again, but it's rather weird, we try to figure it out but I don't know if we do. We ain't classic movie historians (bless them) but we do our best. This adaptation of a French fairy tale has Jane Fonda, Cicely Tyson, Elizabeth Taylor, and Bobby Brady's brother. It should be way better than it is. It is very trippy. Onto The (7 percent solution 1976) guess this one's a bit forgettable since I forgot I'd seen it. Some weird stuff here where Sherlock and frued team up to fight crime and do drugs. Robert Duvall, Alan Arkin and an under used Vanessa Redgrave are here in this. Tell us what you think? Finally today we review Sydney Pollack's (The electric horseman 1979) I remember being intrigued as kid by the electric part, in a hungry for sci fi, just post Star Wars world, but the electric part is more than a bit of a letdown. Adult me has a different take on this Redford and Fonda looking great in tight jeans gem. Want to know more, just press play. Thanks for listening. Tell your friends.
Saturday mornings, space aliens, box tops, John Denver, Griddlepuss, crystal meth... Join us in the wacky world of breakfast cereals! We talk about the cereals we all know & love (and/or hate). Plus: what makes for good cereal packaging & branding? And what's up with those other abominations that fill the shelf? Tune in & find out! 0:35 What kid's cereals do u remember?2:00 Box tops for prizes3:23 Jesse was ineligible for prizes5:12 Old ppl cereal WTF6:21 The most popular cereals7:45 Cheerios yo!9:39 The John MF Denver diet12:20 Dinersaurs, Urkel-O's, Hulk Hogan-O's14:07 Killer cereal: Crystal Meth Crunch17:30 It's all about the sugar20:31 Kellogg's Say What Now?22:40 Toucan Sam got f*cked up24:07 Crazy-ass special editions26:37 Stoners, cereal & soda27:33 Opie & the mysterious shrinking lighterThanks for listening to Cleanup on Aisle 9! Please subscribe and share with your friends, and leave a review so we can reach more awesome listeners like you.
Host Douglas Arthur convenes the Gang Of Occasional Co-Hosts (aka The G.O.O.C.H. Squad) for a rousing conversation about some of the strangest breakfast cereals of our youth (and some not-so-strange ones that still affected us in abnormal ways...) Cereal discussion includes such oddities as Sir Grapefellow, Crazy Cow, Quisp & Quake, Freakies, and Kream Krunch, as well as waltz down memory lane for the 50th anniversary of the General Mills Monster Cereals...pour one out for the late, lamented Fruit Brute! Hurry! Before it gets soggy in milk! --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/SpaceMules/message
For more than 80 years, DC Comics has brought us legends like Wonder Woman and Batman... as well as sillier characters like Kite Man and Bat Mite. There's a long rich history of goofy characters at DC, and we love them all. So that's the subject of our latest Top 4 1/2 List: goofy DC characters. And we invited an expert to play along: Drew, co-host of the Earth Station DCU podcast! Our goofy list includes some Bat-villains, of course, as well as a crime-fighting chimpanzee, a teen president, a hippie mannequin, dogs in space, cab drivers in space, and more. This could have been a Top 400 List, because we didn't even get around to Matter Eater Lad, Mr. Tawky Tawny, Quisp, Bird-Boy, Mer-Boy, and all the residents of the Bizarro World. In fact, this episode just might go on forever... unless you can trick us into saying "Kltpzyxm." Drew and Cletus talk DC Comics every week on Earth Station DCU! And our regular links... The Flopcast website! The ESO Network! The Flopcast on Facebook! The Flopcast on Instagram! The Flopcast on Twitter! Please rate and review The Flopcast on Apple Podcasts! Email: info@flopcast.net Our music is by The Sponge Awareness Foundation! This week's promo: Metal Geeks! This week's other promo: ESO Network Patreon!
In this episode we sit down with Mark Kaelin to discuss his expertise, nameplates. Then, it goes off the rails. Liquor combined with sleeping arrangements, Quisp, murdered skunks, Konga, bad step-fathering and way to little sleep to be recording a podcast. I think we talk about models at some point. NEXT EPISODE - Q&A - We need your questions! Ask us anything. Leave them in the comments or email them to us at modelclubtv@gmail.com Don't forget Model Club TV is also available as an audio podcast everywhere. Mark Kaelin - https://www.facebook.com/mark.kaelin.3 mmischief@msn.com C.G. Blade - cobaltthebook@gmail.com https://www.pseudosynthpress.com/ Model Club TV on Facebook - http://bit.ly/3nJ0IjV Jason Walker on YouTube - https://bit.ly/2YPSaOA
The diet staple of Generation X: cereal. Freakies, Quisp, the Berry cereals Boo & Franken. How fast Fruity Pebbles went soggy. Learn the shocking truth about the little Hawaiian Punch cartoon guy. Robbie-Ann's sugar addiction. Amy's obsession with colorful packaging.
Chapter 21 Narrative Chapter 21 - The Pop! “Fyndoro's Tablet of Finding” - Shroud of the Avatar Woz (1950 - Present) and Mitnick (1963 - Present) Turbolifts (Star Trek) X-Wing (A Galaxy Far, Far Away….) Firefly, Serenity and Kaylee (2002 - 2002) Whendonverse - Joss Whedon Lightspeed Chapter 22 Narrative Chapter 22 - The Pop! Pour Some Sugar On Me, Def Leppard, Hysteria (1987) Aladdin's Castle (1959 - Present) Battlezone (1980) Tennis for Two (1958) PDP-1 computer and Spacewar! (1962) Bryan Adams (1959 - Present) Vice-Princinpal Rundberg vs Rooney Eats It! Pac-Man (1980) Dokken (1979 - 1989, 1993 - Present) Chapter 23 Narrative Chapter 23 - The Pop! Zork (1977) Colossal Cave (1975) The Fly (1986) Breakfast Cereals Froot Loops (1963) Honeycombs (1965) Lucky Charms (1964) Count Chocula (1971) Quisp (1965) Frosted Flakes (1952) Cap'n Crunch (1963) The Last Dragon (1985) The Scroreboard
No matter what school looks like this year, we can always make memories that last a lifetime. The TechnoRetro Dads take a look back at their edu-macation and maybe give you a few ideas for using all the retro memories to help today’s kids. It’s time to head back to some form of learning! But let’s pause and take a look back at what it was like back in the day. In the NEWS Our first impressions of Bill and Ted 3 And Cobra Kai is making impressions with us Jay is looking forward to a new Star Trek book And there may be a possibility of a movie in your future... TechnoRetro Cereal - News A newly graduated student is using cereal to help with some unfortunate circumstances. And was the classic cereal mascot Quisp inspired by a comic book character. Plus, where can you find a bag of just Lucky Charms marshmallows? TechnoRetro Arcade - The Tech of our Schools When did you go to school? The 80’s? The 90’s? No matter what decade you found yourself learning the basics, it is always a big deal when your school gets some new technology. Even having that freshly mimeographed worksheet passed out to you was a sign of modern times. We take a look at some of our early tech exposure such as the Apple ][ computer, or the TRS-80. And who could forget those wonderful filmstrip projectors? Magazine Rack - Starlog September 1980 This month’s Starlog had a cover story about a legendary, cinematic special edition. Nope. Even before Star Wars, Close Encounters of the Third Kind returned to theaters with never before scenes, but not digitally-added Jabba the Hutt. There were also some great features about Space 1999, Clash of the Titans, and Galaxina. Empire Strikes Back had been out for several months when this issue came out. What was the reaction after it had successfully woven it’s way into the new decade? It may not be what you think. TechnoRetro School Supplies Do you remember getting the chance to go to the store and pick out your new supplies for the upcoming school year? Even today it’s a memorable experience, but we take a look back at some of the more iconic items such as cardboard pencil boxes, Pee Chees, and Trapper Keepers. And then we get ready for lunch by grabbing our legendary tin lunch boxes with a wide variety of pop culture characters. Can we help make this school year memorable in a positive way for today’s generation? Let’s hope so
This week talk about the Sunday Morning Slasher, Carl Eugene Watts, and try Quisp Cereal. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/cereal-killer/support
The Cereal Bracket is out! Did your favorite cereal make the cut or did it get ranked towards the bottom? Let us know, drop us a voice nugget and let the anger out. Oh btw, QUISP is a weird word to say. Help us grow and tell a friend about us! *The Cup to Cup Rundown* Florida Man @ 7 minutes Bracket @ 11 minutes 7 Minutes in Heaven @ 22 minutes She's Always Right @ 32 minutes This is Where We Fuc*ked Up @ 49 minutes Would You Rather @ 59 minutes Rant @ 1:10 minutes Thanks for listening and supporting the little guys! Please subscribe, drop us a review and share us to a friend. As always, check out CuptoCupLife.com for updated brackets, dad tips, more info on our guests, breweries and a dope blog too. Follow us @cuptocupshow across all social media platforms and to get involved with future episodes and bracket votes! Leave us a voice nugget on the site for us to play on the show or email if you'd like to be guest or have segment idea! Cheers!
Thanks to a request by a Midwest listener, we try some corn cereals…including new Kellogg’s Honey Nut Frosted Flakes and the obscure Quisp from Quaker. Plus, we spell D-I-S-A-P-P-O-I-N-T-E-D with “improved” Alpha-Bits from Post.
Bob Paré sits down with Justin and Jon for the twenty-eighth episode of The Hold Up to talk about some of Bob's childhood favorites, most importantly, Fast Times at Ridgemont High and Quisp cereal. Bob also opens up about coming of age during a different generation than our hosts, seeing classic 80s movies in the... Continue Reading →
Do you remember Quisp cereal? How about Necco Wafers, Big League Chew, Pudding Pops? What started out as a discussion about food turned into a nostalgic look at our favorite sugary snacks! Warning: this episode my put you into sugar shock!
The Eye of the Beholder review and watch-along. While investigating the disappearance of the USS Ariel crew, Kirk and company uncover a world where everything is perfect—a little too perfect. In this episode of Saturday Morning Trek, hosts Aaron Harvey and Joe Slepski take you on a side journey through the works of the episode’s writer, David P. Harmon, to find out where Happy Days originated, the influence of the Magnificent Seven on Star Trek, and, of course, we answer the pressing question, "What is Brett Summers famous for?" Oh yes, and we also find out what happened to the crew of the Ariel. So get your DVDs, Blu-rays, or Netflix ready, grab a bowl of Quisp cereal, and join us in the wood-paneled den for this hybrid review and watch-along! Chapters Intro (00:01:22) The Match Game, Brett Summers and the Magnificent Seven (00:03:47) Love American Style (00:12:46) Watch-along "They Eye of the Beholder" (00:15:49) Episode Reaction (00:39:53) Closing (00:45:24) Hosts Aaron Harvey and Joe Slepski Production Aaron Harvey (Editor and Producer) C Bryan Jones (Executive Producer) Matthew Rushing (Executive Producer) Ken Tripp (Executive Producer) Norman C. Lao (Associate Producer) Eric Extreme (Associate Producer) Joo Kim (Associate Producer) Richard Marquez (Production Manager) Brandon-Shea Mutala (Patreon Manager)
Saturday Morning Trek: A Podcast About Star Trek in the 1970s
Aaron & Adam continue their interview with Bob Kline, Filmation designer and layout artist. Bob answers these baffling questions: Why was everything pink? What does the Starfleet uniform have to do with having a second turbolift on the bridge and can the Aqua Shuttle really go to warp? We also break the time barrier and zoom through the 80s and 90s to talk about He-Man, Animaniacs, Gargoyles and more! It's another jam packed episode so grab some Quisp, your Mego Trek toys and settle in! Chapters Intro (00:01:03) Not Color Blind (00:01:48) Three Guys from Layout (00:06:09) Ship talk (00:10:49) Extra turbolift (00:21:09) He-Man (00:39:54) Animaniacs (00:43:39) Gargoyles (00:52:18) Closing (00:59:32) Hosts Aaron Harvey Adam Drosin Guest Bob Klein Production Aaron Harvey (Editor and Producer) C Bryan Jones (Executive Producer) Matthew Rushing (Executive Producer) Ken Tripp (Executive Producer) Norman C. Lao (Associate Producer) Eric Extreme (Associate Producer) Joo Kim (Associate Producer) Richard Marquez (Production Manager) Brandon-Shea Mutala (Patreon Manager).
Taste testing Russian sweets and Quisp: the popular cereal nobody in this generation knew about...We take the "Beanboozled" challenge...Kyle's Brita-filtered bottom shelf vodka...Charging an iPhone with a 9 volt battery...Children's pointless science experiments...Guy addicted to keyboard duster...20+ true facts that sound fake...Darwin awards...Magic birthday and Bruce Lee facts...Wrap up...
Saturday Morning Trek: A Podcast About Star Trek in the 1970s
Mudd's Passion. Roger C. Carmel is back as Harry Mudd, this time swindling miners with a love potion. Yay?! Yeah, not so much. The Harry Mudd character had been pretty well mined, pun fully intended, and in the 21st century is somewhat problematic. So, what do we do when an episode may not be our favorite? Why, we dive deeper! We look at an unused shuttle seen in the background of the shuttle bay, postulate on the connection between the Ursanoids and D.C. Fontana’s original concept for a founding member species of the Federation, we even talk about spectacular failures of rail-based romantic-comedy TV shows! So join us in our review of “Mudd’s Passion” where the sum of the parts are greater than the whole. Chapters Intro (00:01:02) News (00:02:19) Synopsis (00:02:59) Air Date, Writer (00:04:38) Supertrain (00:05:12) Voices (00:08:53) Review (00:09:45) Ursanoids and Tellarites a shared history? (00:14:45) Quisp Cereal Commercial (00:20:54) Trek Tech (00:28:27) Bloopers (00:32:33) Closing (00:34:17) Hosts Adam Drosin Aaron Harvey Production Aaron Harvey (Editor and Producer) C Bryan Jones (Executive Producer) Charlynn Schmiedt (Executive Producer) Matthew Rushing (Executive Producer) Ken Tripp (Executive Producer) Norman C. Lao (Associate Producer) Eric Extreme (Associate Producer) Mike Bovia (Associate Producer) Joo Kim (Associate Producer) Richard Marquez (Production Manager)
It’s hard to believe, but Reel Spoilers is three years old. This episode was recorded on the anniversary of the release of our first episode. So we take a brief (for us) stroll down memory lane before discussing 'Finding Dory.' We also discuss the merits of Squirt, Quisp and Quirst which, in turn, leads us into a conversation about Tom’s childhood battle with a speech impediment. It’s like a Reel Spoilers “After School Special.” Plus, Dan has a Video Recovery. It’s Reel Spoilers 194: 'Finding Dory.' You’ve been warned. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Kevin and Kornflake celebrate 75 years of the King of Atlantis, the guy in the scaly orange shirt (perhaps not the fanciest of superhero costumes), Aquaman! Yes, Aquaman has been talking to the fish since 1941, he's a founding member of the Justice League of America, and he's your favorite Super Friend. So let's show some respect. We also look at Aquaman's whole crazy Aqua-family: his flipper-footed wife Mera, his teen sidekick Aqualad, and Aqualad's "deep-six chick" (yeah, that's what they called her) Aqua-Girl. And then we have Aquaman's greatest villain (and coolest member of the Legion of Doom) Black Manta, his pesky little "water sprite" Quisp (sort of an underwater Great Gazoo), and his giant octopus buddy, Topo (who is also a fine musician, because why not). We cover Aquaman's 1960s Filmation cartoons, his 1970s Mego action figure, his live action debut on Smallville, and his truly outrageous appearances in Batman: The Brave and the Bold. And of course, a dark scary Game of Thrones-style Aquaman is coming soon to a theater near you! But we suspect that the lighter, sillier version of Aquaman will always be our favorite. And we have freshly-baked Aqua-cookies to prove it.
Get yourself a bowl of Quisp or Count Choclula and join The Regular Joes for a look back at the Saturday morning cartoons of the seventies and early eighties. What holds up today, and what seems inexorably tied to its era. Is it just nostalgia or were the cartoons of our youth somehow better than what we have today? And, for that matter, how many of the cartoons we associate with our childhoods are actually the product of an earlier time. All this plus Show and Tell and another round of Who Would Win in a Fight.
I will turn 45 in a little less than two weeks (Feb 8th). I’m starting to feel like Andy Rooney. Looking back at my life here are some thoughts: Every phone had a chord on it. The phone RANG. There were no ring tones. Movies were about $5 and if you didn’t see it at the movies you waited till it came on TV. There was no way to rewind or pause. If you had to do something you had to wait until a commercial came on. Cars ran on leaded gasoline. Speaking of Gasoline, the air was dirty and the sex was clean. Well, it wasn’t lethal anyway I barely, I mean barely remember black and white TV. Captain Kangaroo was cool. Mr. Rogers was not. Ernie was my favorite muppet, but looking back I wonder if Burt was his “partner.” Saturday mornings were spent with Bugs and Friends, and School house rock (educational TV, what a thought). I would have a bowl of Captain Crunch, or Quisp, or Frankenberry. I remember when we left the cool new “video game” PONG on without turning off the TV and it burned the final score into the screen. It was so much cooler than playing pinball. I was the only kid in first grade who knew who Jimi Hendrix was when he died. Nixon was president and Ali was champ, and you could catch “The Johnny Carson show” (as I called it) at 11:30 for a large part of my childhood. In my opinion, Ali is still the champ. I remember listening to top 40 music on AM radio through the one speaker in dash board of my mom’s Plymouth duster. None of the words were bleeped out. I remember hooking up a CB radio in my bedroom with the antenna going out the window. On occasion I could talk to my friend at the end of the street. (ancient version of text messaging?). I road my bike everywhere. No hill was too tall. I’m not sure how, but my Mom didn’t seem to care that I was gone most of the day. There was no way to reach me. If I was going to be late, I would use a pay phone. I had to be home when the street lights came on. To this day, I never understood how 8-track tape players got popular. They sounded awful, didn’t play right, and often fell apart. I still have two containers of 45 records, and over 400 LPs. I haven’t listened to a single one in about 4 years. I still have a turn table, but nothing to plug it into (and yet I will not throw them away). I am noticing that more and more of my sentences begin with “these kids of today…” I remember life before Google when everyone had a set of encyclopedias. While I vowed as a child to never grow up to be like my Dad, I hear more and more of his words coming out of my mouth directed at my children. He’s kind of cranky and will turn 80 in June. That scares the crap out of me. While I use to be able to get away without wearing my glasses, things are really getting blurry now. The bad news unless I get surgery, my eyesight is only to get worse. That’s right: this is as good as its going to get. When I was a kid, if I got pudgy a growth spurt would come along and take of it. I’m still in need of another growth spurt. When I was a kid the word “sucks” was a curse word (it insinuated oral sex). There was no attention deficit, and ADHD, and ADXKYMGT (etc) kids. If you were hyper, you got detentions. If you continued, you got paddled. My ninth grade Algebra teacher flung an eraser at a student who was sleeping in class. There were no guns, no metal detectors, and in general we all attempted to pay attention. When I was in school there was honor roll (GPA 3.5 and above) and Merit Roll (GPA 3.0 – 3.5). Today there is no Merit Roll, and the honor Roll is 3.0 and above. And yet people want to argue about the “dumbing of America.” We also kept score. There was a loser and a winner. Both experiences had lessons to be learned. A dirty fight in high school was if someone brought a bat. It only happened once, and we were all so shocked it never happened again. I remember at McDonald’s when I graduated from the hamburger, and could actually eat a Big Mac. There were no super sizes. I think there were small and large fries. No one would even think about eating two big macs in one sitting. We would eat McDonald’s every Thursday before Mom went bowling. I enjoyed dunking my fries in my milk shake. Today if I eat a big mac, I spend the next hour clearing my throat and feeling awful. There might have been one person who got pregnant (we understood the concept of a condom, and feared disappointing our parents). Now there are day cares at the high schools. Girls are congratulated when they get pregnant at age 16, and told “you’re are so lucky.” I have seen parenting traded in for friendship. I have also seen children with fewer manners, less respect for adults, and a general shrinking of the time when children are “innocent.” My parents dragged me to church. I didn’t always want to go, but I’m glad they did. I never would’ve survived my Mother’s Death without my faith. There are no teenagers at my church because the parents want to be “friends” with their kids, and they let them call the shots. I knew all my neighbors growing up. I can’t name a single neighbor on my street. That’s sad. I have seen Americans grow larger (myself included). When I was 25, “That was the year” that I was going to get in shape. When I was 30, THAT “Was the year” I was going to get in shape. Well I’m turning 45 in 12 days (February 8th) and THIS IS THE YEAR that I get in shape. You see as you get older your muscles shrink, and losing weight will only get harder – unless I take steps to keep the muscles I have and build new ones. I’m turning 45, and my wife jokingly says I’m half way to dead. We’ve come along way. I’ve witnessed black and white TV to the space shuttle. While technology is supposed to enhance our lives, I feel nothing is more enhancing than having my family around a table at dinner. Nothing competes with someone saying “I love you.” I feel nothing recharges my batteries than my faith in God. I truly believe that freedom can come through the discipline of teaching our children right from wrong. That takes courage. They will hate you for about 10 years, but when they turn 25 and have children of their own they will thank you. The first 45 years were good. The second 45 are going to be great (if I can just remember where I put my glasses).